Authors
Nie, P., Ma, B.-G.
Abstract
Accurate computational reconstruction of bacterial transcriptional regulatory network (TRN) from sequence information alone remains a fundamental challenge in systems biology, particularly for non-model organisms lacking extensive transcriptomic data. We present DDTRN, a sequence-driven framework that formulates TRN inference as a binary classification task over concatenated regulator-target gene sequence pairs and employs a Dual Descriptor (DD) model to predict regulatory interactions. The DD architecture represents a sequence into two learnable components: Composition Weight Map (CWM) and Position Weight Function (PWF). We comprehensively evaluate DDTRN against six conventional machine learning baselines across eight benchmark bacterial datasets, including E. coli (DREAM5, RegulonDB), B. subtilis, S. enterica, C. glutamicum, M. tuberculosis, P. aeruginosa, and S. coelicolor. DDTRN achieves superior overall performance, attaining average AUROC and AUPR scores of 0.869 and 0.868, respectively, with particularly pronounced advantages at lower descriptor ranks where positional weighting compensates for limited sequence context. Systematic sensitivity analyses of rank, embedding dimension, and basis function count reveal stable optimal operating regimes, while subsampling experiments demonstrate strong robustness even with limited training data. Interpretability analyses show that PWF learns distinct periodic contributions across different rank granularities and that CWM preferentially weights meaningful k-mers. A case study on E. coli dataset further illustrates that DDTRN identifies method-specific candidate targets complementary to those proposed by conventional approaches. By operating solely on genomic sequence, DDTRN provides a scalable, interpretable, and data-efficient framework for bacterial TRN inference in species where expression data are scarce, and it establishes a foundation for future multimodal integration with condition-specific regulatory information.
Preprint server:
bioRxiv
The authors list and abstract were imported from bioRxiv on 03 Jul 2026.
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